Breakdown of En été, les cerises sont chères, mais le melon reste souvent moins cher que les autres fruits.
être
to be
le fruit
the fruit
en
in
souvent
often
rester
to stay
mais
but
l'été
the summer
autre
other
moins
less
que
than
cher
expensive
la cerise
the cherry
le melon
the melon
Questions & Answers about En été, les cerises sont chères, mais le melon reste souvent moins cher que les autres fruits.
Why does the sentence begin with En été?
Why does French use les cerises instead of just cerises?
French often uses the definite article to talk about things in general. So les cerises here does not mean a specific set of cherries only; it means cherries as a category. This is more normal in French than leaving the noun bare, which English often does.
Why is it chères with -es?
Why is it le melon and not les melons?
French can use the singular definite article to talk about something in a general sense. So le melon here means melon as a fruit/category, not necessarily one single melon. This is very common in French, especially when talking about food, animals, or general truths.
What does reste mean here? Why not just use est?
Reste comes from rester, which means to remain or to stay. In this sentence, it adds the idea that melon continues to be less expensive, even when other fruit prices are high. If you said est, the sentence would still make sense, but reste gives a stronger sense of an ongoing situation.
Why is souvent placed after reste?
In simple tenses, French adverbs like souvent, toujours, parfois, and déjà often come after the conjugated verb. So reste souvent is the normal word order. English often allows more flexibility, but French tends to place these adverbs in a more fixed position.
How does moins cher que work?
Why is it moins cher and not moins chère?
What does les autres fruits mean, and why is autres plural?
Why use cher instead of expensif?
For prices, cher is the normal and natural French word. French speakers usually say that something est cher or n’est pas cher. The word expensif exists, but it is much less common and usually not the best choice for everyday statements about food prices. In this sentence, cher is exactly what a native speaker would expect.
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“How does grammatical gender work in French?”
Every French noun is either masculine or feminine, and this affects the articles and adjectives used with it. "Le" is used with masculine nouns and "la" with feminine ones. Adjectives also change form to match — for example, "petit" (masc.) becomes "petite" (fem.).
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